Start your week at Microscope, a Bushwick gallery focused on film and time-based media. Tonight they are launching a series of video works by emerging artists called "YES." The program features works made entirely using the tools and content offered by the internet.

If House of Yes puts on an orchestra concert, you can be sure that it will be an experience unlike anything you've experienced before. Black Angels is an immersive concert experience featuring the live orchestral sounds of Ensemble LPR, film noir projections by Chnnls, visuals by Christian Hannon, and aerial performance spectacles by House of Yes.

A new play by The Working Theater, Bamboo in Bushwick, explores gentrification in this neighborhood from various angles. The synopsis reads: "As a group of old friends gather for a round of dominoes, outside forces converge on their street corner. In an alternate reality, inspired by the psychedelic murals that have taken over many walls in the neighborhood, a turf war breaks out on the icy tundra. Is there room in Brooklyn for both penguins and polar bears?"

After you pay your taxes (or send in an extension), you may find yourself in an utter need of laughter. There's not much going on in our neck of the woods because of Easter, but luckily, The Knitting Factory has a free comedy night, which was started by Hannibal Buress, and is now hosted by trio Will Miles, Clark Jones, and Kenny DeForest.